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Impact of IMF SDRs for Commercial Trade

Being coerced into an IMF/BIS loan straightjacket is asking to invoke the loss of your nations sovereignty. Check first BRICS and other noninvasive alternatives.

The global corporatist economy works differently from business transactions at your neighborhood convenience store. Ostensibly, the International Monetary Fund was set up to allow the G20 nations to umpire the ground rules to play nice in macro trade. Platitudes about promoting job growth or third world development are the realm of public relations for the central banks. The impact of the IMF on virtually all countries, vividly seen in every crisis whether real or contrived, always has a political objective that underpins the economic functions. As confidence in national currencies falter, the big sugar daddy loves to intervene, provided they pull the strings.

"You can think of SDRs as an artificial currency used by the IMF and defined as a "basket of national currencies". The IMF uses SDRs for internal accounting purposes. SDRs are allocated by the IMF to its member countries and are backed by the full faith and credit of the member countries' governments."

"The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) today approved a two-year Stand-By Arrangement (SBA) for Ukraine. The arrangement amounts to SDR 10.976 billion (about US$17.01 billion, 800 percent of quota) and was approved under the Fund's exceptional access policy. The authorities’ economic program supported by the Fund aims to restore macroeconomic stability, strengthen economic governance and transparency, and launch sound and sustainable economic growth, while protecting the most vulnerable."

As this example illustrates the IMF interposes their lending schemes on non-G20 counties. While the proposed BRICS Development Bank offers a competing banking scheme, the reigns of global financial control are still in the hands of the BIS gang of banksters. As the Towards an expanded role section of The case for a real SDR currency board, points out; the magnified role of a substitute function for SDRs allows for reserve assets collateralization.